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Holandes Gouda Colonial Mold

Started by IllinoisCheeseHead, May 16, 2015, 03:59:40 PM

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IllinoisCheeseHead

Hi

I purchased a Holandes Gouda Colonial Mold that has a flat follower.  I did not realize that it was flat and ordered it.  I am making Gouda today and don't really understand how am I supposed to flip this cheese while pressing.  Is it ok to flip even though the top and bottom are of different shape?

Thanks

Stinky

My brother works on a dairy where they have this sort of mold. I asked him, but he said it evens out. I'd go ahead as planned, and perhaps towards the end of pressing use only light pressure on the round end to keep it rounded while allowing the other end time to take the same shape.

IllinoisCheeseHead

Ok.  I will try it.  I am waiting to cut the curds and will add a thread on how my Gouda went today.  I am taking a little different approach with regards to PH and working towards 6.45 at initial hooping time (what Dixon recommends).  I am using starter culture per Sailors recommendation as well.

Thanks

IllinoisCheeseHead

It worked perfectly.  Not as exactly as like a gouda but since it is only a fraction of the cost of a gouda mold, I will NOT complain :)

Stinky

Yay, congratulations! Make sure to make a thread and post pictures and make notes.

hoeklijn

Surprising  ;D As a Dutchman living near Gouda I never saw moulds like this.
But here we use a method called "Rechten" (translatable as "Straitening out") where we flip the cheese after pressing and put in back in the mould for a night before the cheese is brined. That way the rim fro the follower will disappear and the cheese gets a nice even shape. Will work with this mould as well....

Stinky

Quote from: hoeklijn on May 28, 2015, 03:07:15 PM
Surprising  ;D As a Dutchman living near Gouda I never saw moulds like this.
But here we use a method called "Rechten" (translatable as "Straitening out") where we flip the cheese after pressing and put in back in the mould for a night before the cheese is brined. That way the rim fro the follower will disappear and the cheese gets a nice even shape. Will work with this mould as well....

But then you have to compensate during the make so the acidity does not get so low.

hoeklijn

When the Gouda is washed twice and stirred well during the washing, you wash away most of the milksugars, which would otherwise be transformed to lactic acids by the culture. The straightening is something that is done by all cheese producing farmers here in the neighbourhood  :D

Stinky

Yeah. So do herman's trick but make sure you use a Gouda recipe that calls for sitting out for a while before brining.